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Co-sponsored by Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the
University of South Carolina-Beaufort
Another great
crowd for last week's
Gullah Film Festival! Just one more week! This is on a first come, first served basis. We only
have 206 seats, so at 6 pm I will start handing out a ticket
to each person in line (one ticket per person, no reserved
seating). You must personally be in line to get a ticket. If
you know someone with school-age children please tell them
about these events... we only had 1 child last week and
children should be encouraged to see these films as it is
Black History Month. The doors will open at 6:30pm. Tell a
friend that doesn't get the newsletter.
See you at the movies!
Shawn
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Monday, February 18, 2008, 7 pm ~ Admission ~ Donation
Remnants of Mitchelville
This documentary film produced by Jimmy Henderson of
Columbia, South Carolina, focuses on the history and legacy
of Mitchelville. Henderson tells through a variety of visual
formats film, video tape, newspapers, photographs, and
memorabilia... At its peak, Mitchelville, South Carolina,
one of the first settlements for freed men in the United
States, was a bustling, energetic beach township, boasting
almost 1500 residents. Named in honor of General Ormsby
Mitchel, who established the township in 1862 to house the
area's freed slaves, Mitchelville was Hilton Head's very
first planned community, featuring quarter-acre home lots
divided by streets and interspersed with stores. The people
of the township elected their own officials, passed their
own laws, founded the First African Baptist Church - the
oldest continually operated Baptist church on the Island -
and established South Carolina's first compulsory education.
Family Across the Sea
This award-winning program is Roots - retold as an
historical and linguistic detective story. It traces how
scholars have uncovered the connection between the Gullah
people of South Carolina's Sea Islands and the people of
Sierra Leone. Family Across the Sea demonstrates how African
Americans kept their ties with their homeland over centuries
of oppression through their speech, songs and customs. In
the 1930s a pioneering black linguist, Lorenzo Turner,
discovered over 3000 words of African origin in the Gullah
dialect. The film's conclusion, the moving return of a
Gullah delegation to Sierra Leone and the African "family"
they hadn't realized they had, becomes a homecoming for all
African American. This film won a Silver Apple Award, a
National Educational Film and Video Festival Gold Award,
First Place in the 24th Annual Houston International Film
and Video Festival, and a SC Associated Press Broadcasters
Award. Should be
required viewing in every introduction to Black Studies and
American Culture." - Selase Williams, former chair, National
Council for Black Studies.
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